Research Areas

Teaching Areas

Faculty & School/Dept.

Faculty of Health - Department of Psychology

Degrees

MA - 2000University of TorontoToronto

PhD - 2004University of TorontoToronto

Biography

Dr. Till received her B.Sc. (1997) from the University of Waterloo, Ontario. From there she moved to Toronto where she attended the University of Toronto to complete her Masters (2000) and PhD (2004) in Psychology. She then accepted a post-doctoral position at the Toronto Rehabilitation Institute where she completed her clinical training in neuropsychology (2006). She is a registered psychologist with an expertise in neuropsychology in both children and adults. Dr. Till is a tenured Associate Professor in the Clinical Developmental Area in the Department of Psychology and Faculty of Health at York University. She is also appointed as an Adjunct Scientist of the Neurosciences and Mental Health Research Program at The Hospital for Sick Children.

Awards

Supervision

Currently taking on work-study students, Graduate Assistants or Volunteers: Yes

Available to supervise undergraduate thesis projects: No

Current Research

Dr. Till's research interests are as follows: children's environmental health (impact of early life exposures to neurotoxins on children's cognitive and behavioural development), and clinical neuropsychology (impact of neurodegenerative disease and brain injury on cognitive function; changes in brain integrity and function over time).

Research Projects

Impact of early life fluoride exposure on cognitive and behavioural outcomes in childrenBecause of the unique vulnerability of the developing brain, the potential for adverse neurodevelopmental outcomes as a consequence of prenatal and early postnatal fluoride exposure is of high public health relevance. This study is testing for adverse impact of water fluoridation to help guide policy and practice decisions. If safety concerns are identified, the public health intervention can be refined to minimize risk for adverse health outcomes, particularly among population sub-groups that tend to bear a greater environmental health burden, including biologically vulnerable populations, such as formula-fed infants.Role: Principal InvestigatorAmount funded: $480000Year Funded: 2016Duration: 2Funded by: National Institutes of Health (US)

The clinical-demographic, epidemiology, pathobiology and neuroimaging features of acute demyelination in Canadian childrenMy role on this project involves overseeing the neuropsychological assessments of 100 patients with demyelinating disease and 100 healthy controls recruited through this initiative and heading the research related to neurocognition and assessment of quality of life in this population Role: CoInvestigatorAmount funded: $4.653 MYear Funded: 2015Duration: 3Funded by: Other...Other funding: Multiple Sclerosis Scientific Research Foundation